About Leasehold - Sell Buy Invest or Search Oahu Honolulu Hawaii
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About Leasehold - Sell Buy Invest or Search Oahu Honolulu Hawaii
11/13/12 Leasehold Inf ormation LEASEHOLD A leasehold interest is created when a fee simple landowner enters into an agreement or contract called a ground lease with a lessee. A lessee buys leasehold rights much as one buys fee simple rights; however, the leasehold interest differs from the fee simple interest in several important respects. First, the buyer of residential leasehold property does not own the land and must pay ground rent. Second, his use of the land is limited to the remaining years covered by the lease. Thereafter, the land returns to the lessor, and is called reversion. Depending on the provisions of any surrender clause in the lease, the buildings and other improvements on the land may also revert to the lessor. Finally, the use, maintenance, and alteration of the leased premises are subject to any restrictions contained in the lease. C onversion of leasehold property to fee simple ownership involves purchasing the landowner's remaining interest, called the leased fee interest. The lessors of many, if not most, leasehold properties are currently offering to sell their leased fee interests to their lessees or prospective buyers of a leasehold property. There is a State of Hawaii law affecting the mandatory conversion of single family leasehold properties. © 1995-2005 Honolulu Board of REALTORS®. All rights reserved. Information herein deemed reliable but not guaranteed. www.hbrhawaii.com/tenur-lh.html 1/1 11/13/12 Hawaii Condo’s owners can’t buy their land - Pacific Business News From the Pacific Business News :http://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/print-edition/2012/07/13/condos-owners-cant-buy-their-land.html Condo’s owners can’t buy their land Ruling brings decade-long Admiral Thomas case to end Premium content from Pacific Business News by Duane Shimogawa, Reporter Date: Friday, July 13, 2012, 12:00am HST Duane Shimogawa Reporter- Pacific Business News Email | Facebook | Twitter | LinkedIn Admiral Thomas condominium owners will not be able to purchase their land from the First United Methodist Church, now that courts have settled a decade-long dispute by dismissing condemnation proceedings. The condo at 1221 Victoria St. in Honolulu sits on land owned and used by the church for its sanctuary and classroom space. The ruling marks the final case under the City and County of Honolulu’s 1991 Mandatory Condominium Lease-to-Fee Land Conversion ordinance (Chapter 38). The First United Methodist Church was represented by Ashford & Wriston partner Jim Mee, while the city acted on behalf of some Admiral Thomas condo owners. Mee said the church had asserted, for almost a decade, that there were not enough qualified lessees to trigger condemnation. “While we are pleased that this 10-year journey has finally ended in our favor, the church never contemplated that allowing a condo to be built on its land would result in the threatened loss of its property,” said church spokesman John Gibbs. He also said that the judgment includes recovering its attorney fees and costs, which were substantial and will now be used to serve its members and the surrounding community. The church has been known for its outreach to immigrants, at-risk families and the homeless. The city law, modeled after the state’s Land Reform Act that broke up large landholding estates, had allowed owner-occupant lessees to direct the city to condemn land underneath their condos and allow them to purchase the property for fair market value. The ordinance was repealed in 2005, but this one final case continued in the courts until just a few weeks ago after the city did not file an appeal to the decision, which favored the First United Methodist Church. The ruling is important, Mee told PBN, because while the ordinance may have made sense for single-family homeowners it did not mean lessees should be able to condemn “all types of private property. Condemnation is not necessarily a good tool to try to address what people perceive as being a problem.” The case began in December 2002 when the city designated the Admiral Thomas condo for condemnation. When the church refused to sell its property to the lessees, the city filed a condemnation complaint in Circuit Court in May 2003. The condemnation was first dismissed in September 2004 on the grounds that a mixed-use property was not covered by the ordinance and that there were not enough qualified owner-occupant lessees to trigger a condemnation. After being on appeal for two years, the Hawaii Supreme Court sent the case back for further consideration by the trial court, which after further hearings again decided that there were not enough qualified lessees. A second appeal by the city and lessees resulted in the Intermediate Court of Appeals upholding the lower court’s determination and awarding the church its attorneys’ fees and costs that had been denied in an earlier judgment. “It is the end of an era for this law,” Mee said. “It seems unlikely that government will ever try to do this kind of law in the future.” In addition to the Admiral Thomas case, Mee successfully stopped the condemnation of the Kahala Beach Apartments. “[The Kahala Beach property] was the hardest fought of all of those in court,” Mee said. “That is still a leasehold apartment project at this point. The courts determined, like the Admiral Thomas, to uphold the law, dismissing condemnation.” City and County of Honolulu officials could not be reached for comment. Duane Shimogawa covers energy, real estate and economic development for Pacific Business News. www.bizjournals.com/pacific/print-edition/2012/07/13/condos-owners-cant-buy-their-land.html?s=print 1/1 11/13/12 Manoa Cottage Kaimuki New nursing Home for Alzheimers and dementia. Call now for care! manoacottage.com Comcast Business Internet Is Your Internet Slowing You Down? Switch & Get Speeds Up to 100 Mbps! Business.Comcast.com/Internet Your Computer is Slow Repair Your PC Before it Gets Worse Follow These 3 Steps Immediately! SpeedMaxPc.com — ADVERT ISEMENT — — ADVERT ISEMENT S — NEWS NO FRAMES Thursday, January 27, 2005 27 Kaneohe Marines die Thursday, January 27, 2005 Isle military families seized by uncertainty War-zone crashes had killed 7 with isle ties LEASE-TO-FEE CONVERSION Elections could present more dangers Lease-to-fee law repealed UH to quadruple tuition waivers HPD officer honored Fallen isle soldier honored Judge punts on issue of open court $95M sought for courts CRAIG T. KOJIMA / CKOJIMA@STARBULLETIN.COM Supporters of a bill to repeal the city's condo leasehold reform law marched yesterday from Kawaiaha'o Church to City Hall, where they chanted and danced. Maui facility to retrain exconvicts Hawaii unit sent to aid ship Volcanologist George Walker dies archives.starbulletin.com/2005/01/27/new s/story5.html FEE LAW REPEALED 1/4 11/13/12 Honolulu Star-Bulletin New s /2005/01/27/ Newswatch, Police & Courts Kokua Line by June Watanabe Repeal supporters cheer the 6-3 Council vote, but lessees fear loss of their homes Obituaries By Crystal Kua ckua@starbulletin.com Island Images Corky's Hawaii Corrections Weather Community Calendar Neighborhood Boards Volunteers NO FRAMES The City Council voted yesterday to void the controversial ordinance that allows condominium owners to use the city's condemnation powers to buy title to the land under their buildings. The Council voted 6-3 to repeal the mandatory lease-to-fee conversion law known as Chapter 38. The measure now goes to Mayor Mufi Hannemann, who has said that he would sign a repeal bill. "To me, Chapter 38 promotes unfairness, and that is why it has been so controversial," said Councilman Nestor Garcia, who voted to repeal the law. "I love my home and I don't really want to give it up, and I really don't think that it's fair that we should have to after the many years we have been there." Melba Maxwell Owner of a unit in the Kalia in Waikiki After the vote, repeal supporters, including representatives of charitable trusts, small landowners, charter school students and teachers, and native Hawaiian activists applauded the Council's action. Looking For A New Phone? Latest Smartphones. Low Prices. Verizon, Sprint, TMobile & More! Wirefly.com They stood and broke into a chorus of "Hawaii Pono'i." "We won. I'm just so happy. ... We've been fighting for this for the longest," said 17-year-old Helena Crawford, a senior at Waianae High School who has taken part in programs sponsored by the Queen Liliuokalani Trust, which owns land in Waikiki with leasehold condominium units. — ADVERT ISEMENT S — "This means we can continue to protect our lands, we can continue to rely on our ownership into the future, rely on its cash flow and take care of our educational programs," said Ray Soon, vice president of community relations with Kamehameha Schools, which also fought to kill the law. Chapter 38 harms charitable trusts like Kamehameha Schools and Queen Liliuokalani by taking away needed revenue generated from the condominium leases, its detractors said. Small landowners also said they have been at a disadvantage with lessees who have had City Hall on their side. archives.starbulletin.com/2005/01/27/new s/story5.html 2/4 11/13/12 Honolulu Star-Bulletin New s /2005/01/27/ "Today is a wonder day in Hawaii nei for our children, our alii trust and protection of landownership for all of Hawaii's people," testified LeRoy Akamine, a Kamehameha Schools alumnus. But lessees said they fear they will face high lease payments or lose their homes as a result of the law being voided. "I love my home and I don't really want to give it up, and I really don't think that it's fair that we should have to after the many years we have been there," Melba Maxwell, who owns a unit in the Kalia in Waikiki, testified. They also contend the city is liable for its decision to not only repeal the law, but to cut off applicants close to converting. "We assumed that the City and County of Honolulu would live up to its obligations under its contract. This is just a flagrant breach by the Council of that," said Robert Dupire-Nelson. A resident of the Kahala Beach apartment, he is one of the plaintiffs who filed suit Monday against the city over the anticipated repeal of the law. Another lawsuit was filed Tuesday by lessees at the Admiral Thomas condominium. "I think we're placing every faith that the courts of Hawaii will uphold the law and uphold reason and allow actions to continue," Dupire-Nelson said. "If the courts do not allow the (conversion) action to continue, I think ... it puts a great deal of questions into how long you can remain somewhere." The Council rejected an amendment introduced by Councilman Charles Djou that would have permitted some lessees in cases close to Council approval to complete the conversion process. Djou and other members said the amendment would have helped limit the city's exposure to liability. The mandatory leasehold conversion law was passed in 1991 to help condominium leasehold owner-occupants gain title to the land under their units. The city uses its powers of eminent domain to condemn the land and turn over the fee interests to the eligible unit owners. City Council www.co.honolulu.hi.us/council/index1.htm E-MAIL THIS ARTICLE | | | PRINTER-FRIENDLY VERSION E-mail to City Desk BACK T O T OP archives.starbulletin.com/2005/01/27/new s/story5.html 3/4